Advertisement:



Diagnosis How do you diagnose asthma in children?

March 15th, 2010 by admin | Filed under asthma


The clinician must determine that:
• Episodic symptoms of airflow obstruction (coughing, wheezing, shortness of breath or rapid breathing, chest tightness) are present.
• Airflow limitation is at least partially reversible.
• Alternative diagnoses are excluded.

Note:
• Signs and symptoms of asthma can vary widely and may mimic other common childhood illnesses. Diagnosis can be difficult and has important implications.
On the one hand, asthma is frequently underdiagnosed and, thus, many infants and young children do not receive adequate therapy.
On the other hand, not all wheeze and cough are caused by asthma, and caution is needed to avoid giving infants and young children inappropriately prolonged asthma therapy.
• Recurrent episodes of cough with or without wheezing are almost always due to asthma.
• Coughing may be the only symptom present.

Diagnosis of children who wheeze with respiratory infections can be difficult.
• Underdiagnosis of asthma is a frequent problem, especially in children who wheeze when they have respiratory infections.
These children are often labeled as having bronchitis, bronchiolitis, or pneumonia.
• Infants and young children (< 6 years) often wheeze with viral upper respiratory infections (URIs), and may benefit from asthma treatment

Infants with indications of allergy (eczema, chronic rhinitis, positive skin tests) are more likely to wheeze throughout childhood, and may be at risk for asthma even without early symptoms. For most nonallergic infants, the wheezing lessens and ultimately disappears in the preschool years.

(Read More on Free Ebook at PDF Format)

Download Diagnosis How do you diagnose asthma in children?.pdf




Advertisement:



tag_iconTags: | | |

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

DO YOU WANT PUBLISH THIS ARTICLE INTO YOUR SITE?



*copy-paste the code above into your post blog


Related Post:
  • Introduction and diagnosis of tuberculosis in children
  • Guidelines for the Diagnosis and Management of Asthma
  • All about Allergy, Diagnosis of Allergy
  • All about Allergy, How Do I Know If I Have Allergies?
  • Controlling Your Asthma Patient Education Guide


  • Recent searches: sample letter of recommendation for nurse Nurses application letter hospital nurse application letter hospital nurse sample cover letter for RN New graduate sample letter of recommendation for nurse sample letter of recommendation for Physical thera sample cover letter for RN New graduate Pathophysiology of Diabetes Mellitus Phlebotomist

    Leave a comment.

    To leave a comment, please fill in the fields below.